
Employee Stock Options Become Highly Sought After: OpenAI's Valuation Aims for New Heights
Amid the global wave of generative artificial intelligence, OpenAI is accelerating its capitalization efforts. According to insiders, the company is in preliminary talks for a secondary sale of employee shares, with a target valuation as high as $500 billion, far surpassing the $300 billion level reached earlier this year. This news has reignited the market's enthusiasm for the valuation of "super-unicorns" in the AI field.
Although details have not been officially disclosed, initial discussions indicate this round of sales may focus on shares held by current and former employees, with plans to privately transfer them to existing supporters, including Thrive Capital.
Valuation Leap Draws Strong Capital Market Attention
This valuation leap marks OpenAI's steady entry into the "elite tech giant" club. Compared to the SoftBank-led valuation at the end of 2023 ($300 billion), the current pricing of $500 billion represents an increase of more than 60%, reflecting investor confidence in its future commercial potential.
Insiders point out that this secondary market transaction does not involve new share financing, and OpenAI itself will not raise additional funds. However, it will help the company strengthen its employee incentive mechanisms and boost external confidence in its corporate governance structure.
Investors Eager to Increase Stakes as Employee Cash-out Window Opens
The focus of this transaction is on the liquidity rights of employee stock options. For many early employees of OpenAI, this opportunity signifies a substantial wealth release window. Investors like Thrive Capital are also taking the chance to increase their stake, showing a firm belief in OpenAI's long-term prospects.
Analysts believe that such employee equity sale arrangements help maintain talent attraction and alleviate liquidity anxiety amid a tightening financing environment in the primary market. Especially as innovation in the AI field becomes increasingly intense, the stability of an organization's talent structure has become a core competitive advantage.
Not Just Technologically Advanced: Clear Path to Commercialization
Behind OpenAI's rising valuation is not only its user base and technological leadership in products like ChatGPT but also the gradual commercialization of its business model.
Currently, OpenAI achieves revenue growth through ChatGPT Plus subscriptions, enterprise API licensing, and deep collaboration with Microsoft Azure. According to foreign media reports, OpenAI's annualized revenue for the 2024 fiscal year is approaching $2 billion, and it could further open monetization avenues in advertising and cloud computing.
This rapid revenue growth potential provides tangible support for its high valuation. Some market observers even expect that if the revenue curve continues to rise, OpenAI might not rule out initiating an IPO process in the coming years.
AI Bubble or Revaluation?
However, there are differing opinions about the $500 billion figure. Some conservative investors worry that the generative AI sector currently exhibits elements of "irrational exuberance," particularly when the profitability model is not fully clear, which could pose medium to long-term risks with an excessively high valuation.
In response, some analyses suggest that OpenAI's situation differs from typical AI startups, as it has built a comprehensive tech ecosystem, user products, and industry collaboration matrix, progressively transitioning from a "research institution" to a tech platform with profit-making capabilities. Therefore, its soaring valuation might be seen as a "revaluation of value" rather than "bubble inflation."
Has the New Era of AI Valuation Begun?
Whether or not the eventual transaction goes through as planned, OpenAI's move undeniably reinforces the trend of capital revaluation in the AI field. In a macroeconomic context with sluggish recovery and generally volatile technology sectors, the high valuation maneuvers of AI unicorns inject strong confidence into the market.
With regulations becoming clearer, application scenarios increasingly diverse, and deeper integration with traditional industries, the true value of companies like OpenAI may just be beginning to emerge. The next destination might be Wall Street.

